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Drone or fixed LiDAR? A practical comparison for stockpile inventoryDrone or fixed LiDAR? A practical comparison for stockpile inventoryDrone or fixed LiDAR? A practical comparison for stockpile inventory
05 Jun 2024 05. Juni 2024 05 de junio de 2024 · Sachtleben Technology
We get this question once a week: "We need to measure our stockpile — should we hire a drone or install a fixed system?" The answer is usually "both, but not at the same time" — and the key is what you intend to do with the data.
What a drone survey can do. An experienced pilot flies a 5-hectare pile in 60–90 minutes, delivers a point cloud with sub-centimetre node spacing and a volume figure at >99 % accuracy at a resolution a fixed sensor will rarely match — we routinely cross-check our terrestrial Riegl stack against the drone data at sub-percent level. You get one photograph per job. If you need that photograph again in two weeks, we fly again.
What a fixed OWL EYE® STOCKPILE installation can do. The same pile, every few minutes, around the clock, without anyone on site. Accuracy is ±1 % — good, but not as good as a survey-grade drone. In return, latency is minutes instead of days, and the volume curve streams straight into ERP.
When the drone wins.
- One-shot need. Annual inventory for the auditor, due diligence ahead of a sale, hand-over survey to a new operator. A drone campaign in northern Germany costs a manageable mid four-figure amount per site. A fixed installation does not pay back for a single annual measurement.
- Complex geometry without a sensor location. Long piles, multiple shadowed areas, no workable mast or roof position for an optic. A drone just flies over the geometry.
- Survey-grade accuracy required. When the auditor asks for >99 % in writing, the terrestrial survey variant with the Riegl VZ-1000 is the answer. We offer that as a separate Bulk Inventory service.
When the fixed installation wins.
- Piles that change daily. Active production piles, with material in and out several times per shift. A drone scan would be three days stale.
- Dispatch needs the number in ERP. A drone campaign delivers a PDF that someone has to type into SAP. A fixed installation streams OPC UA straight into the ERP loop.
- Closed-loop material control. As soon as the volume measurement feeds back into a control loop — throttling the feed, pulling a shift forward — a weekly drone survey is too slow.
When both win. This is the most common case in practice. The fixed installation runs day-to-day operations; once a year a drone flies a reference inventory and calibrates the fixed system against survey-grade truth. We have run this combination with several customers for years and it is the simplest way to get the best of both worlds.
A rule of thumb. If you need a volume figure less than twice a year, hire the drone. If you need one weekly or more often, install the system. If your dispatch acts on it daily, the drone is just the annual reference check.
Both options live at /stockpile/ and /drone-survey/ — or write to info@sachtleben-technology.com with your pile size and the measurement frequency you want, and we will recommend the right one.
We get this question once a week: "We need to measure our stockpile — should we hire a drone or install a fixed system?" The answer is usually "both, but not at the same time" — and the key is what you intend to do with the data.
What a drone survey can do. An experienced pilot flies a 5-hectare pile in 60–90 minutes, delivers a point cloud with sub-centimetre node spacing and a volume figure at >99 % accuracy at a resolution a fixed sensor will rarely match — we routinely cross-check our terrestrial Riegl stack against the drone data at sub-percent level. You get one photograph per job. If you need that photograph again in two weeks, we fly again.
What a fixed OWL EYE® STOCKPILE installation can do. The same pile, every few minutes, around the clock, without anyone on site. Accuracy is ±1 % — good, but not as good as a survey-grade drone. In return, latency is minutes instead of days, and the volume curve streams straight into ERP.
When the drone wins.
- One-shot need. Annual inventory for the auditor, due diligence ahead of a sale, hand-over survey to a new operator. A drone campaign in northern Germany costs a manageable mid four-figure amount per site. A fixed installation does not pay back for a single annual measurement.
- Complex geometry without a sensor location. Long piles, multiple shadowed areas, no workable mast or roof position for an optic. A drone just flies over the geometry.
- Survey-grade accuracy required. When the auditor asks for >99 % in writing, the terrestrial survey variant with the Riegl VZ-1000 is the answer. We offer that as a separate Bulk Inventory service.
When the fixed installation wins.
- Piles that change daily. Active production piles, with material in and out several times per shift. A drone scan would be three days stale.
- Dispatch needs the number in ERP. A drone campaign delivers a PDF that someone has to type into SAP. A fixed installation streams OPC UA straight into the ERP loop.
- Closed-loop material control. As soon as the volume measurement feeds back into a control loop — throttling the feed, pulling a shift forward — a weekly drone survey is too slow.
When both win. This is the most common case in practice. The fixed installation runs day-to-day operations; once a year a drone flies a reference inventory and calibrates the fixed system against survey-grade truth. We have run this combination with several customers for years and it is the simplest way to get the best of both worlds.
A rule of thumb. If you need a volume figure less than twice a year, hire the drone. If you need one weekly or more often, install the system. If your dispatch acts on it daily, the drone is just the annual reference check.
Both options live at /stockpile/ and /drone-survey/ — or write to info@sachtleben-technology.com with your pile size and the measurement frequency you want, and we will recommend the right one.
We get this question once a week: "We need to measure our stockpile — should we hire a drone or install a fixed system?" The answer is usually "both, but not at the same time" — and the key is what you intend to do with the data.
What a drone survey can do. An experienced pilot flies a 5-hectare pile in 60–90 minutes, delivers a point cloud with sub-centimetre node spacing and a volume figure at >99 % accuracy at a resolution a fixed sensor will rarely match — we routinely cross-check our terrestrial Riegl stack against the drone data at sub-percent level. You get one photograph per job. If you need that photograph again in two weeks, we fly again.
What a fixed OWL EYE® STOCKPILE installation can do. The same pile, every few minutes, around the clock, without anyone on site. Accuracy is ±1 % — good, but not as good as a survey-grade drone. In return, latency is minutes instead of days, and the volume curve streams straight into ERP.
When the drone wins.
- One-shot need. Annual inventory for the auditor, due diligence ahead of a sale, hand-over survey to a new operator. A drone campaign in northern Germany costs a manageable mid four-figure amount per site. A fixed installation does not pay back for a single annual measurement.
- Complex geometry without a sensor location. Long piles, multiple shadowed areas, no workable mast or roof position for an optic. A drone just flies over the geometry.
- Survey-grade accuracy required. When the auditor asks for >99 % in writing, the terrestrial survey variant with the Riegl VZ-1000 is the answer. We offer that as a separate Bulk Inventory service.
When the fixed installation wins.
- Piles that change daily. Active production piles, with material in and out several times per shift. A drone scan would be three days stale.
- Dispatch needs the number in ERP. A drone campaign delivers a PDF that someone has to type into SAP. A fixed installation streams OPC UA straight into the ERP loop.
- Closed-loop material control. As soon as the volume measurement feeds back into a control loop — throttling the feed, pulling a shift forward — a weekly drone survey is too slow.
When both win. This is the most common case in practice. The fixed installation runs day-to-day operations; once a year a drone flies a reference inventory and calibrates the fixed system against survey-grade truth. We have run this combination with several customers for years and it is the simplest way to get the best of both worlds.
A rule of thumb. If you need a volume figure less than twice a year, hire the drone. If you need one weekly or more often, install the system. If your dispatch acts on it daily, the drone is just the annual reference check.
Both options live at /stockpile/ and /drone-survey/ — or write to info@sachtleben-technology.com with your pile size and the measurement frequency you want, and we will recommend the right one.
Want to discuss this topic or share your own experience? Email info@sachtleben-technology.com — we always reply. Möchten Sie über dieses Thema sprechen oder Ihre Erfahrung teilen? Schreiben Sie an info@sachtleben-technology.com — wir antworten immer. Chcą Państwo omówić ten temat lub podzielić się własnym doświadczeniem? Proszę napisać na info@sachtleben-technology.com — zawsze odpowiadamy.